NCACC chairperson and Justice Minister Jeff Radebe said South Africa exported arms worth R80,9 million to Libya between 2003 and 2009.

He refused to say whether more weapons went to Libya last year ahead of that country’s civil unrest.

South African law prohibits the sale of weapons to countries where they may contribute to repression, human rights violations or were likely to escalate regional military conflicts, endanger peace or threaten regional stability.

The NCACC was supposed to oversee weapons and military equipment transactions to ensure this did not happen.

Last year the government approved the sale of more than R35-billion worth of military hardware to 78 of the world’s most repressive regimes, according to the report.

Denel denies sales to Libya
Arms manufacturer Denel on April 1 denied it, or its subsidiaries, had sold armaments to Libya following a sales trip to the country a year ago.

“Not at all,” the company’s acting group communications manager, Pamela Malinda, told the South African Press Association (Sapa) when asked whether any such sales had taken place.

The Mail & Guardian published details on April 1 from a leaked Denel internal memo outlining a visit to Libya in April last year, which involved the “planned sale of G6-52 artillery systems, missiles, grenade launchers and anti-materiel rifles”.

The business opportunities for Denel in Libya amounted to R6 289-million.

The report quotes Malinda saying Denel representatives had visited Libya “to explore the opportunities for the marketing of defence products”.

Malinda confirmed to Sapa this was correct, but repeated that, with one exception, “no contracts and deals were concluded”.

Exception
The exception was a contract struck with Denel subsidiary Mechem for “training on de-mining equipment”.

Mechem specialises in the clearance of landmines. The company also builds mine-protected vehicles such as the Casspir.
- Sapa and Staff reporter